
John
379 posts









Following the KelpDAO hack, we built an open analysis of DVN security configurations across every active OApp on LayerZero over the last 90 days. Of ~2,665 unique OApp contracts: 47% run a 1-of-1 DVN security floor, 45% run 2-of-2, and ~5% run 3-of-3 or higher. As we know, KelpDAO's rsETH sat in the first bucket. Open query, public methodology, feedback welcome: dune.com/dune/layerzero…




OneKey Founder Yishi on Handling the KelpDAO Hack 1, Best case: negotiate with the hacker and offer a 10-15% bounty. 2, If talks fail, let the LayerZero ecosystem fund cover most of the loss. 3, KelpDAO is the weakest; compensate with tokens + future revenue, or sell the whole project to L0 or BMNR. 4, Aave’s Umbrella and stkAAVE serve as the final backstop, but WETH depositors must not take any haircut — otherwise it would trigger repricing across Morpho, Spark, Fluid, Euler, blacklist the LRT sector, and set DeFi back by years. 5, He believes Aave can survive this. x.com/ohyishi/status…

The latest @aave statement is doing two things at once: 1) It's freezing further exposure, which is responsible, 2) and it's anchoring the framing toward "mainnet rsETH fully backed," which is preference disguised as fact. The underlying reality -> the Adapter on mainnet holds the staked ETH. rsETH on mainnet and rsETH across 20+ L2s all point to the same reserve. ~18% of that reserve is gone. How you allocate that hole is a distributional choice Kelp controls. If @KelpDAO ringfences mainnet, L2 rsETH is effectively zeroed. @0xMantle in particular is cooked. Majority of aWETH there is backed by rsETH that no longer has a claim on anything. @arbitrum and @base sit behind it. This is a terrible precedent. The whole pitch of a canonical LRT on 20+ chains was that an rsETH is an rsETH. If the answer to a bridge exploit is "home-chain holders made whole, L2 holders bear the loss," then rsETH on L2s was never the same asset. It was always an unsecured withdrawal ticket priced like collateral. Kelp has to own this call. And the honest answer, economically and reputationally, should be proportional socialization across all rsETH holders + engaging Umbrella on mainnet. Concentrating losses on L2s is locally convenient for Aave Core, globally worse for the system. It opens @ethena contagion into Mantle USDT, bleeds into @Plasma, and tells every other LRT that their L2 supply is junior to their mainnet supply by default. To me it looks liek rsETH on L2s isn't just cooked in this incident. If Kelp makes mainnet whole at the expense of L2 holders, all LRTs (or maybe even LSTs) on L2s is cooked as a category.




$Meta narrative violation




The rsETH markets on Aave V3 and Aave V4 have been frozen. Aave's contracts have not been exploited and this is an exploit related to rsETH. The freeze follows an exploit of the Kelp DAO rsETH bridge. Freezing the rsETH markets prevents new deposits and borrowing against rsETH collateral while the situation is assessed. We are reviewing information about rsETH borrows on Aave that occurred after the exploit and will share more details as soon as possible. If the protocol accumulates bad debt from this incident, we'll explore paths to offset the deficit.




Earlier today we identified suspicious cross-chain activity involving rsETH. We have paused rsETH contracts across mainnet and several L2s while we investigate. We are working with @LayerZero_Core, @unichain, our auditors and top security experts on RCA. We will keep you posted as we learn more about this situation. Please follow only the official @KelpDAO handle for the updates.













